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Published byIrene Craig Modified over 8 years ago
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Ch. 8 – Completing the Accounting Cycle
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The Adjustment Process IFRS should be followed, meeting the objectives of relevancy, reliability, and comparability Accrual accounting – means attempting to record revenues and expenses when they happen, regardless of whether cash is received or paid The chunks of time used for financial measurement are called fiscal periods The time period concept ensures that the comparability objectives in accounting is met The action that senior accountants take at the end of a fiscal period is called adjusting the accounts
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An adjusting entry is a journal entry that assigns an amount of revenue or expense to the appropriate accounting period; at the same time, it is an entry that brings a balance sheet account to its true value Example: We have a debit balance of $15 000 for supplies However, we have used supplies throughout the year It is too time-consuming to make an expense entry, every time supplies are used However, a “taking inventory” could be performed on a quarterly basis Therefore, supplies would be credited each quarter to arrive at a final balance
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After posting, the balance sheet amount of Supplies will be true, and the actual cost of using supplies will be recorded on the income statement Many times expense items are paid in advance Items such as insurance may cover a length of time that applies to the current fiscal period and the following fiscal period Here, there is a need for special accounting treatment at statement time A prepaid expense is an item paid for in advance, but one where the benefits extend into the future Prepaid expenses have value and belong in the asset category The pattern for making the adjustment to Prepaid Insurance is the same as the one for Supplies: determine the true value of the balance sheet account, make a credit entry to adjust the Dec. 31 st balance down to its true value, and make a corresponding debit to an expense account
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For supplies we can do an inventory For insurance, we must do a little math If our policy is $1600 for one year, each quarter we use up $400 of the the policy (see page 272-273 - example) Financial statements are not usually prepared until 2 to 3 weeks after the fiscal year-end This should be sufficient time to receive purchase invoices that affect the fiscal period that just ended You must include all costs that helped the business earn revenue during a fiscal year If late-arriving invoices were not recorded, net income would be overstated because valid expenses were not deducted from revenue Similarly, there may be times when you may want to adjust revenue (see page 274 – where a cheque has been deposited but no service has been provided to earn anything during the fiscal period)
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Review of Section You now know how to prepare adjusting entries for four common year-end situations: 1) supplies, 2) prepaid expenses such as insurance, 3) late-arriving invoices, and 4) unearned revenue No matter how complex an adjustment appears, you will be able to do it correctly if you use common sense and follow the theory that you have learned so far Examples of journal entries on page 275
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